Blues Moments in Time: November 11 — From sorrow to song, a lineage that transforms
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This episode traces November 11 as a microcosm of the blues’ journey—creation, tragedy, evolution, and legacy. From Louis Armstrong’s 1926 Hot Five session where jazz phrasing pulsed with blues ache and hope, to Mose Allison’s dry-witted bridge between jazz and rock, and Ernestine Anderson’s silky strength threading jazz-pop and blues grit, the day reveals the genre’s emotional DNA at work across eras.
We move through St. Louis Jimmy Oden’s haunting “Goin’ Down Slow,” B.B. King’s early life milestone, and Chris Smither’s folk-blues fingerpicking that keeps the Delta pulse alive. Billie Holiday’s “Lady Sings the Blues” farewell at Carnegie Hall blurs art and autobiography—pain woven into poetry, every note a goodbye. The heartbreak mirrors on: Berry Oakley’s motorcycle death near Duane Allman’s, reminding us the blues sometimes writes in circles.
Finally, Graham Edge’s passing in 2021 carries the blues’ spirit into symphonic rock and dreamlike soundscapes—proof the genre never fades, only transforms. November 11 stands as a living thread through jazz, rock, soul, and folk: truth, joy, survival, and the unbroken voice rising from sorrow to song.
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